El Comercio (Peru)

El Comercio

Issue 1 of El Comercio, released May 4, 1839.
Type Daily newspaper
Format Berliner (Monday-Friday)
Broadsheet (Saturday-Sunday)
Owner(s) Empresa Editora El Comercio S.A.
Editor Fernando Berckemeyer Olaechea
Founded May 4, 1839
Language Spanish
Headquarters Lima
Circulation 120,000
Sister newspapers Trome, Perú.21, Gestión, Depor, La Prensa.
Website http://elcomercio.pe

El Comercio is a Peruvian newspaper based in Lima. Founded in 1839, it is the oldest newspaper in Peru and one of the oldest Spanish-language papers in the world. It has a daily circulation of more than 120,000. It is one of the most influential media in Peru.

The government of Juan Velasco Alvarado expropriated the newspaper in the mid-1970s. The company was returned to their original owners by President Fernando Belaúnde Terry on July 28, 1980, the same day he assumed office. It was his first official act upon assuming his presidency.

Headquarters in the Historic Centre of Lima

Currently, the newspaper is owned by shareholders of the Miró Quesada family, whose ownership of the company dates to 1875. Despite this, management is under control of an individual who is not a member of the family.

The company has ownership over its subsidiaries, the newspapers Peru 21 and Trome, and the magazine Somos.

The corporation, Empresa Editora El Comercio S.A., is the product of the merging of many companies in 1996. The company manages the editing, publication, and distribution of the newspaper, El Comercio, as well as the publication and distribution of Trome, Peru 21, and Gestion. In addition, they manage the advertising aspects of the mentioned publications. Additionally, they are devoted to the editing, publication, and distribution of many other books, magazines, pamphlets, weeklies, all sorts of graphic publications, multimedia products, and videography. Informational content is distributed by their subsidiary Orbis Ventures S.A.C., a company in charge of the administration of the company's website.

The legal address of the company, where their administrative offices are, is 300 Jr. Miró Quesada, Cercado of Lima, Lima, Peru. Their publishing factories, Pando and Amauta, are in the districts of Pueblo Libre and the Cercado of Lima.

Financially, the company operates very independently, as the effects of consolidation have not in large part affected the operation of their subsidiaries, Orbis Ventures S.A.C., Zetta Comunicadores del Perú S.A.E.M.A., EC Jobs S.A.C., Punto y Coma Editores S.A.C., Suscripciones Integrales S.A.C., Amauta Impressiones Comerciales, Producciones Cantabria S.A.C., Inmobiliaria El Sol S.A. and Grupo TV S.A.C.

Team of Ricardo Uceda

In 1994, Ricardo Uceda resigned as editor-in-chief of to form a special investigative team at El Comercio.[1] As with Uceda's reporting, the Comercio team focused on cases of governmental corruption.[2] One their most notable successes came in 1998, when they exposed the misuse of state funds intended for the survivors of floods and mudslides induced by the 1997-98 El Niño event; the story resulted in the arrest and imprisonment of Civil Defense Chief General Homero Nureña.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Michael Kudliak (2000). "IPI WORLD PRESS FREEDOM HEROES". freemedia.at. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
  2. "Ricardo Uceda". Lettre Ulysses Award for the Art of Reportage. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
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